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Kastelein of V.O.F. Expathos, in the Netherlands along with Chris Cook- CFUV radio journalist and Editor in Chief of Pacific Free Press. Cook is based in , Victoria, British Columbia.
The site is a sister to Atlantic Free Press and Brick Ogden an American Expatriate in Amsterdam has been a key supporter of this project.
The mission of Pacific Free Press is simple: to dig out nuggets of truth from
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Iraq is the most dangerous place in the world for journalists. Along with names and dates, the Brussels Tribunal has listed the circumstances under which Iraqi media personnel have been killed since the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in March 2003. This extremely credible report cites 195 as dead. If non-Iraqi media representatives are included, the figure goes beyond 200. Both figures are well in excess of the media fatalities suffered in Vietnam or during World War II.
The primary reason why reporting from Iraq is dangerous for all journalists is the horrific security situation. Iraqi journalists reporting from the streets are in perpetual danger. If any of the countless militias does not want a certain story made public, it will make sure that the journalist has filed his or her last story. Not to mention the scores of reporter deaths which have been the combined handiwork of the Iraqi government, occupation forces and/or criminal gangs.
Despite President Bushs assertion that life in Iraq is
improving, a senior Iraqi journalist was found dead in the capital on
March 3, 2007. On the same day the body of the managing editor of
Baghdads al-Safir newspaper, Jamal al-Zubaidi, was found shot in the
head.
The Realities of Repression
The United States
continues to claim that its military operations in Iraq bring freedom
and democracy. But such freedom apparently doesnt extend to Iraqi
journalists. Several journalists critical of the United States or the
U.S.-backed Iraqi government have been killed. For instance, on March
4, 2007 gunmen killed prominent journalist Mohan al Zaher in his home.
That Sunday, his column concluded with the lament, ...if this is the
democracy that we (Iraqis) dreamt of. His earlier articles questioned
U.S. policies in Iraq.
The U.S. military has also conducted
direct raids on media establishments and representatives. During the
invasion, on April 8, 2003, a U.S. warplane bombed the al-Jazeera
bureau in Baghdad, killing 35-year-old journalist Tareq Ayoub.
Britains Daily Mirror later cited the top secret minutes of a
meeting during November 2004 where George W. Bush attempted to get
British Prime Minister Tony Blair to consent to the bombing of the
al-Jazeera headquarters in Doha, Qatar.
More recently, on
February 23, 2007, U.S. soldiers raided and ransacked the offices of
the Iraq Syndicate of Journalists (ISJ) in central Baghdad. The
soldiers arrested ten armed guards and seized ten computers and 15
small electricity generators meant to be donated to families of killed
journalists. Youssif al-Tamimi of the ISJ in Baghdad told one of my
close colleagues, The Americans have delivered so many messages to us,
but we simply ignored all of them. They killed our colleagues, shut
down our newspapers, arrested hundreds of us and now they are shooting
at our hearts by raiding our headquarters. This is the freedom of
speech we received. Many Iraqis believe that the U.S. soldiers were
conveying from their leadership to Iraqi journalists the message of
zero tolerance for criticism of the U.S.-led occupation.
The
U.S.-backed Iraqi government also directly controls the media. The
Coalition Provisional Authority under the U.S. administrator, L. Paul
Bremer, created the Media and Communications Commission as an
instrument of control. This commission, incorporated into the Iraqi
constitution, regulates licensing, telecommunications, broadcasting,
information services, and all other media establishments. Under the
authority of this commission, in July 2004, security forces of the
interim Iraqi government raided and shut down the Baghdad office of the
Arabic satellite channel al-Jazeera. Initially the network faced a
month-long ban on reporting out of Iraq. In November 2004 the Iraqi
government announced that any al-Jazeera journalist found reporting in
Iraq would be detained. Subsequently the ban was extended indefinitely
and continues today.
Another instance of blatant media
repression by the Iraqi state took place on November 11, 2004. During
the siege of Fallujah when Iraqi journalists along with this writer
were reporting the killing of civilians and the use of prohibited
weapons like white phosphorous by the U.S. military, Iraqs Media High
Commission issued a warning on the official letter head of the prime
minister. The letter instructed reporters to, Stick to the government
line on the U.S. led offensive in Fallujah or face legal action and
also to set aside space in your news coverage to make the position of
the Iraqi government, which expresses the aspirations of most Iraqis,
clear.
The international NGO Reporters Without Borders, which
advocates freedom of the press, releases an annual worldwide press
freedom index. Countries are ranked on the basis of surveys designed to
record any kind of harassment of journalists and state violence against
them that forces them to flee or abandon their work. In 2002, under
Saddam Hussein and his draconian control of the media, Iraq ranked a
dismal 130. In 2006, after three years of U.S. occupation, Iraq fell to
154. The NGO has also declared Iraq to be among the worlds worst
hostage market, with 38 journalist kidnappings in three years.
Direct Manipulation
Currently
there are two main channels for information on Iraq: the Pentagon and
the Iraqi stringers who work for Arab media outlets. For audiences
unfamiliar with Arabic or alternative news sources on Iraq, the only
available news comes from daily press releases by the U.S. military
that are parroted by the establishment media.
Another dubious
source of information is the U.S.-sponsored Iraqi television station
al-Iraqiyah that began broadcasting in May 2003. In January 2004, the
U.S. Defense Department awarded the Florida-based Harris Corporation a
12-month contract to manage the Iraqi Media Network, including
al-Iraqiyah, and provided the physical infrastructure for the expansion
of the network.
The U.S. military also hired the
Washington-based public relations firm Lincoln Group to manipulate
Iraqi public opinion in favor of the United States. The groups covert
program, worth millions of dollars, included various media activities
that faked independent journalism in order to conceal the fact that it
was U.S. state and military propaganda. Former Lincoln Group employees
claim that U.S. military officials were aware of payments to Iraqi
newspapers to print pro-U.S. articles and editorials.
Such
state control has a boomerang effect. False news generated for the
Iraqi public in local papers also comes to the United States as news.
This indirect state-meddling abroad, coupled with direct repression of
the media at home, is also reflected in the Reporters Without Borders
press freedom index. In 2002, the United States ranked 17th. In 2006,
after six years of Bush administration, the rank has fallen to 56th.
Covering the War at Home
Unlike
in Iraq, the problem in the United States began before the 2003
invasion. In the prestigious New York Times, Judith Miller dutifully
parroted the propaganda issued by the Bush administration about Iraqs
weapons of mass destruction during the lead-up to the invasion. Quoting
one anonymous source after another, she became a highly effective
vehicle of the Bush administration in disseminating misinformation and
lies about Saddam Husseins possession of and attempt to acquire WMDs.
Later,
during an interview with PBS Frontline conducted on July 13, 2006, in
the presence of her lawyer, Miller brazenly defied criticism of her WMD
coverage saying, I didnt feel that I had anything to apologize for
with my WMD coverage.
Once the invasion was launched,
anchorman Tom Brokaw of NBC Nightly News announced to viewers
nationwide, One of the things that we dont want to do...is to destroy
the infrastructure of Iraq because in a few days were going to own
that country.
The Pentagons embedded program where
mainstream media journalists volunteer to act as propagandists requires
a journalist to sign a contract giving the military control over her or
his output which amounts to total censorship. Embedding continues to
this day, as does corporate ownership of the media. Together they
ensure coverage of the occupation that is biased in favor of the state
as the media watchdog group Fairness and Accuracy In Reporting (FAIR)
has exposed.
Corporate ownership of the media has much to do
with the transformation of nationally televised news personalities into
cheerleaders for war. Take the example of the Associated Press. Its
board of directors includes the CEOs and presidents of ABC, McClatchy,
Hearst, Tribune, and the Washington Post. Two of the directors belong
to extremely conservative policy councils like the Hoover Institute, a
Republican policy research center located on the campus of Stanford
University and referred to as Bushs brain trust. Douglas
McCorkindale, another member of the AP board, is on the board of
Lockheed Martin, the worlds largest defense contract company. The
board of AP displays a clear tilt toward right-wing conservative views,
represented by a huge corporate media network of the largest publishers
in the U.S.
Today in the United States, our media is more
homogenized than ever. Only six corporations control the major U.S.
media: Rupert Murdochs News Corporation, General Electric, Time
Warner, Disney, Viacom, and Bertelsmann. These corporations also happen
to be heavy financial supporters of the elite political groups
(Republicans and Democrats alike) that control this country. They put
politics ahead of responsible journalism.
As news outlets
fall into the hands of large conglomerates with holdings in many
industries, conflicts of interest inevitably interfere with news
gathering, according to FAIR. Independent media are essential to a
democratic society, and...aggressive antitrust action must be taken to
break up monopolistic media conglomerates.
Until that happens
in the United States, media coverage of Iraq is likely to worsen. As
for Iraqi journalists, promises of free speech and freedom of the
press--just like the earlier promises of liberation, economic
opportunity, and freedom for the Iraqi people--will not materialize
before the end of the U.S. occupation of the country.
Dahr Jamail
has reported from inside Iraq and is a Middle East expert. He writes
for Inter Press Service, The Asia Times, and is a contributor to
Foreign Policy In Focus.